Renuka Balakrishna, S., 2023. Barn owl breeding in agricultural landscapes of Great Britain. PhD, Nottingham Trent University.
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Abstract
Habitat loss and fragmentation associated with agricultural intensification have affected farmland biodiversity worldwide. Large tracts of heterogeneous natural habitats are transformed into homogenous agricultural lands thereby resulting in a decline in farmland bird populations. The resultant decline in farmland bird populations can be associated with unsuitable foraging habitats, a decline in prey resources and an increase in chemical pollutants such as pesticides associated with agriculture. In this thesis, I use the widely studied and monitored farmland raptor species, the barn owl (Tyto alba) to examine the effects of agricultural landscape composition of different crop types, and the pesticides used in the cultivation of cereal crops, the most dominant crop type in Great Britain, on barn owl brood size (a proxy for barn owl productivity) and nestling body mass (a proxy for nestling body condition). In addition, I also explore the impact of the most dominant crop type, cereal crops, on the diet of the barn owl in Great Britain.
Previous studies on barn owl breeding success in relation to land use in the South Midlands and South East of Great Britain have shown that barn owl breeding is independent of land use. However, these studies are local and use broad habitat types. In this novel study (Chapter 2), the effects of agricultural landscape composition of different crop types on barn owl brood size and nestling body mass across a national level and a regional level between three regions of Great Britain, namely the Midlands, the South East and the South West, with varying degrees of agricultural intensification, are examined. Among all crop types, fruit/forage crops have a positive impact on barn owl brood size, whereas, cereal crops have a negative impact on barn owl productivity, with a greater total area of cereal crops predicting smaller brood sizes. I build on using the landscape composition of cereal crops to further explore the impacts on aspects of barn owl reproduction in Chapter 3, where the effects of the landscape composition of cereal crops on maternal barn owl body condition and consequently the impact on barn owl brood size and nestling body mass is determined. Here I show that the perimeter:area ratio (a proxy for habitat complexity) of cereal crop fields has a positive impact on the maternal body condition of barn owls with a greater perimeter:area ratio of cereal crops predicting larger brood sizes. Building on the results of both Chapter 2 and Chapter 3, the impact of four commonly used pesticides by weight, in the cultivation of cereal crops namely, fungicides (chlorothalonil and diflufenican) and herbicides (glyphosate and flufenacet), on barn owl brood size and nestling body mass is investigated. An increase in the use of the herbicide flufenacet has a negative impact on barn owl brood size in Great Britain. Finally, in Chapter 5, the impact of the landscape composition of cereal crops on the diet of the barn owl in the Midlands and South East, the two regions that showed differential responses in the impact of cereal crops on brood sizes in Chapter 2 and Chapter 4, is determined. The number of prey items recovered in the diet of the barn owl decreased with an increase in the total area of cereal crops.
The findings of this study demonstrate that barn owl reproduction is not influenced by agricultural landscape alone, but by a series of knock-on effects of agricultural landscape composition and management practices on life-history traits such as maternal body condition of breeding barn owls, and on prey availability around barn owl nest boxes. Finally, Chapter 6 offers recommendations to improve the quality of life for barn owls, with implications for the conservation of all farmland species.
Item Type: | Thesis | ||||||||||||||||
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Description: | This research program was carried out in collaboration with the British Trust for Ornithology | ||||||||||||||||
Creators: | Renuka Balakrishna, S. | ||||||||||||||||
Contributors: |
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Date: | October 2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Rights: | This work is the intellectual property of the author. You may copy up to 5% of this work for private study, or personal, non-commercial research. Any re-use of the information contained within this document should be fully referenced, quoting the author, title, university, degree level and pagination. Queries or requests for any other use, or if a more substantial copy is required, should be directed in the owner(s) of the Intellectual Property Rights. | ||||||||||||||||
Divisions: | Schools > School of Animal, Rural and Environmental Sciences | ||||||||||||||||
Record created by: | Laura Ward | ||||||||||||||||
Date Added: | 15 Apr 2024 10:34 | ||||||||||||||||
Last Modified: | 15 Apr 2024 10:34 | ||||||||||||||||
URI: | https://irep.ntu.ac.uk/id/eprint/51251 |
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